4. These instructions don’t make any sense at all. I can’t _____________ them
_____________.
5. After Aunt Mary’s stroke, her chances didn’t
look good, but she _____________
_____________.
6. My daughter begged me to let her get her ears pierced, and I finally _____________
_____________.
7. After
Manuela became sales manager, she _____________ annual sales _____________
from $4 million to $23 million in less than five years.
8. I’m tired of listening to you complain. If you don’t _____________ _____________, I’m
going to go home.
vk.com/englishlibrary
Stress in Two-Word Phrasal Verbs, Part 1
When a word (or syllable in a word with more than one syllable) is
stressed, it means that
native speakers say that word or syllable a little more strongly and with a slightly higher
pitch (the level of their voice). Learning the stress patterns that
native speakers use when
they say phrasal verbs will you help to use them more effectively and will also help you to
be more easily understood by native speakers.
In general, how a phrasal verb is stressed (shown here with capital letters) depends on
whether it is separable or inseparable and whether it is transitive (it requires an object) or
intransitive (it cannot have an object). Some phrasal verbs
can be both transitive and
intransitive.
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